This article's lead sectionmay be too short to adequately summarize the key points. Please consider expanding the lead to provide an accessible overview of all important aspects of the article.(March 2024)
She worked at the Lithuanian Social Market Development Institute. Skaistė also is a Member of Lithuanian Riflemen's Union and Honorary Member of the Lithuanian Community of the Atlantic Treaty.[2][3]
Political career
Since 2005 Skaistė has been a member of the Homeland Union. Between 2007 and 2016 she was member of Kaunas municipal council. In 2016 she was elected member of the Seimas.[4]
Controversies
Regulatory shortcomings
End of Skaistė's term as finance minister in 2024 was punctuated by greatest financial scandals to rock Lithuania for decades.
BaltCap
In February 2024 Šarūnas Stepukonis, an executive at BaltCap, a leading investment fund, was accused of having embezzled over €40m and subsequently losing them on casino bets and trading on Interactive Brokers.[5] This resulted in write-offs[6] by private pension funds in multiple countries. All controls by more than 10 supervisory institutions, most of them under Skaistė's ministry of finance, failed; Lithuanian regulators instead blamed, without providing evidence, Estonian counterparts.
BaltCap is also an investor[7] in the family business of Gabrielius Landsbergis, the foreign minister and the wealthiest[8] Lithuanian politician, which at the time raised concerns and official (internal revenue agency, Seimas anti-corruption commission) investigations regarding possible irregularities, such as acquisitions of state land for €1, using state property to create private wealth[9] and reliance of the private education business model on state subsidies.
Prior to the Stepukonis debacle BaltCap was also involved in controversial large-scale public concessions in Lithuania, such as the Lithuania National Stadium[10] and supposedly charitable rebuilding projects in Ukraine.[11]
In May 2024 Lithuania was shook by a scandal where a number of Lithuanian fintech companies (FoxPay, iSun, Kevin, Bitandpay and others) were found to have laundered offshore casino and possibly drug[13] and German brothel funds across the EU[14] while simultaneously winning multiple (84) tenders to handle payments for Lithuanian state institutions, at 5 times the price charged to the private sector.[15]
Some of the startups maintained family relations and sponsored private jet trips to Dubai for another minister, Monika Navickienė, who subsequently resigned. It turned out the regulators had been looking the other way; the minister's husband turned out to have been a paid PR agent for a convicted financial felon from Russia[16] while the beneficial owner of some of the fintechs was cohabiting with a convicted financial felon from Lithuania.[17]
After the media furor, Ieva Trinkūnaitė, the beneficial owner of FoxPay, was declared to be risk to national security and told to relinquish her ownership stake and executive role. As of August 2024 most Lithuanian institutions are still using FoxPay for their taxpayer-facing payments.
Revolving door between ministry & regulated companies
Finance ministry and subordinate institutions are responsible for supervising the cryptocurrency sector.
Lithuanian regulators often enjoy a revolving door[18] with the companies they have recently regulated, and in some cases, stints across multiple regulators and regulated companies simultaneously.
For example, Saulius Galatiltis, a former Bank of Lithuania regulator who became head of Lithuanian branch of Binance[18] which closed following the record-breaking US prosecution[19] of the exchange and its CEO Changpeng Zhao[20] for money laundering, was appointed and later quietly let go[21] by Skaistė from board of INVEGA, the taxpayper-and-EU-funded national promotional institution (a quango) providing preferential financial terms to national businesses. Galatiltis was simultaneously CEO and shareholder of FoxPay,[22] while a wife of leading official at Financial Crime Investigation Service under Skaistė's ministry of finance was found to be employed as head of regulatory compliance at FoxPay,[23] and the beneficial owner is daughter of a former Bank of Lithuania board member.[24]
Deputy minister corruption allegations
In October 2024 deputy minister Rūta Bilkštytė was accused[25] of failing to declare a conflict of interest when INVEGA, a subsidiary of the ministry, used 3 EU-cofunded venture capital funds to invest ~EUR1m in Amlyze, an anti-money laundering tech startup founded by Bilkštytė's son Gabrielius Erikas Bilkštys together with Jekaterina Govina, a former Bank of Lithuania regulator. Bilkštytė amended her interests' declaration to include her son on June 14, 2024, on the same date as the minister let go Saulius Galatiltis of Foxpay and Binance from INVEGA's board. Bilkštys had been a decade-long business partner[26] of Vilhelmas Germanas (formerly known as Vilius Židelis), a convicted felon and key owner of Foxpay, who facilitated a private-jet Dubai vacation of Monika Navickienė, another minister who was subsequently forced to resign. Germanas was arrested[27] for an initial term of 2 months in October 2024.
In February 2024 the ministry lost its bid to host the EU's Anti-Money Laundering Authority in Vilnius; it did not make the shortlist. Shortly after Eurojust announced discovery of a €2 billion money laundering network run by a Lithuanian financial institution.[30]
According to the Bank of Lithuania, as of February 2023 none of the fintech companies it supervised were compliant with regulations.[36] At least half of the registered cryptocurrency companies are estimated to be shell companies[37] (even after regulatory action recently halving the company count).
In the face of Lithuanian institutions' failure to regulate, in 2023 finance ministry and Bank of Lithuania initiated change in law that would reduce fintech fines by 30% and remove requirement for the regulator to go to court,[38] thus further deregulating the fintech industry.
Unaccounted expenses
In 2023 Skaistė repaid[39] €14,000 of expenses she could account for during her term in Kaunas city municipality that ended in 2016, as part of a wider expenses scandal that shook hundreds of both national and municipal level politicians, leading to some ongoing prosecutions. Some of her expenses remain unaccounted for.
Family
In 2023 the minister's husband, Audrius Skaistys, was disciplined by party organs for publicly calling striking teachers "broilers" and crybabies.[40] During Skaistė's term as minister Skaistys was also implicated in an influence peddling scandal concerning trade in government appointments by another minister, Kęstutis Navickas,[41] and previously for illegally appropriating state land for his family home while serving as deputy head the Department of Cultural Heritage under the Ministry of Culture.[42] In 2016 he litigated against the state after losing a competition for state employment.[43]
Drunk driving
In 2013 Skaistė, then a council member at Kaunas city municipality, was arrested, fined and lost driving license for one year for drunk driving.[44]